Writing in The Guardian (11.05.12) Stuart Kelly praises “Introduction to Antiphilosophy” by Boris Groys, Global Distinguished Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at New York University, and a Consulting Editor for Interlitq: “one of the great strengths of the collection is how Groys brings Russian thinkers into play, into a series of arguments that has often, parochially, been characterised as the free-for-all French versus the logically bean-counting British. In his chapter on Nietzsche and Russian thinkers, for example, he brings a radically new perspective to writers such as Bulgakov and Bakhtin”

Writing in The Guardian (11.05.12), Stuart Kelly praises Introduction to Antiphilosophy by Boris Groys, Global Distinguished Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at New York University, and a Consulting Editor for Interlitq: “one of the great strengths of the collection is how Groys brings Russian thinkers into play, into a series of arguments that has often, parochially, been characterised as the free-for-all French versus the logically bean-counting British. In his chapter on Nietzsche and Russian thinkers, for example, he brings a radically new perspective to writers such as Bulgakov and Bakhtin.”

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